See what can go wrong before you pay a 1688 supplier.
Each anonymous teardown turns one product clue into a pre-payment decision: what looks attractive, what is missing, what Supplymo would check, and whether to continue, sample first, manually review, or stop.
What these are
6 teardownsAnonymous
Not a customer case, testimonial, certificate, or final quote.
Decision-led
Each page ends in continue, sample first, manual review, or stop.
Operational
Focus on product link, MOQ, carton data, prep, supplier risk, and compliance.
Conversion path
Every teardown links back to Product Check or a relevant tool.
The outcome
Every teardown ends in one call
Continue
Low risk — proceed to a normal check.
Sample first
Validate material or fit with a sample.
Manual review
Documents and analyst review before a quote.
Stop
Too much risk to proceed as-is.
Teardown library
Before-payment decisions, taken apart
Use these as examples of what to check before a supplier payment. The details are anonymous templates, not proof that a specific supplier or order will behave the same way.
Manual reviewPortable blender
An anonymous teardown showing why a low 1688 portable blender price needs battery, carton, MOQ, prep, and compliance review before payment.
Buyer context
Shopify, TikTok Shop, or Amazon seller considering a first small batch
Sample firstPet bed
An anonymous pet bed teardown showing how CBM, compression, MOQ, material quality, and prep can change a 1688 buying decision.
Buyer context
Seller comparing a bulky soft-goods product before a first inventory purchase
Manual reviewLED strip light
An anonymous teardown for LED strip sourcing, focused on supplier risk, SKU options, plug/power details, compliance signals, and quote readiness.
Buyer context
Seller comparing a small electronics accessory before supplier payment
ContinueAluminum phone stand
An anonymous phone stand teardown showing how finish, hinge quality, carton data, MOQ, and 3PL prep affect a simple-looking 1688 product.
Buyer context
Seller considering switching a simple accessory from marketplace sourcing to 1688
StopReusable storage bag
An anonymous teardown showing why a reusable storage bag can deserve a stop decision when claims, material proof, MOQ, and shipping volume are unclear.
Buyer context
Seller tempted by a very low visible unit price
Sample firstMakeup brush set
An anonymous teardown for a makeup brush set, focused on material, claims, packaging, branding, SKU count, and marketplace risk before payment.
Buyer context
Beauty seller considering private-label-like packaging from 1688
How a teardown works
One clue, five steps, one decision
Every teardown follows the same path Supplymo uses on a real product check — so you can read it as a method, not a story.
Product clue
One link, image, or reference product to start from.
What looks attractive
The low price or easy win that draws sellers in.
What's missing
MOQ, carton, battery, material, supplier, or compliance gaps.
What Supplymo checks
Match, cost stack, risk flags, and document needs.
The decision
Continue, sample first, manual review, or stop.
Singapore import in practice
What changes landed cost to Singapore
Singapore applies 9% GST to imports, including low-value goods, with low base duty on most categories. A low 1688 price is only the start.
Low-value goods are no longer GST-free
Since 2023, GST applies to imported low-value goods (value S$400 or less) bought from GST-registered overseas vendors, and on import for higher-value goods. Do not assume small parcels are GST-free.
GST 9%, low duty on most goods
Singapore's GST is 9%. Customs Duty applies only to a few dutiable categories (e.g. liquor, tobacco, motor vehicles, petroleum); most general goods are non-dutiable but still GST-bearing. Singapore Customs is the entry point.
Clearing customs is not permission to sell
Category rules (e.g. health products via HSA, controlled goods) still apply. 1688 listing claims do not prove Singapore compliance.
For sourcing planning only. GST, any applicable duty, and category controls can change the final amount — confirm with Singapore Customs/IRAS before paying a supplier.
Questions
About these teardowns
How to read the library and turn it into a decision for your own product.
Submit your productWhat is a before-payment teardown?
A before-payment teardown takes one product clue — a link, image, or reference product — and walks through what looks attractive, what is missing, what Supplymo would verify, and a decision (continue, sample first, manual review, or stop) before any 1688 supplier is paid.
Are these real customer cases?
No. They are anonymous educational templates, not customer case studies, testimonials, or supplier endorsements. They show the method, not a specific past order.
Why does a low 1688 price still need a teardown?
A visible unit price hides MOQ, China freight, prep, carton volume, supplier risk, and compliance. A teardown separates the price from the real landed cost and risk before you commit.
What decisions can a teardown end in?
One of four: continue (low risk, proceed to a normal check), sample first (validate material or fit with a sample), manual review (documents and analyst review before a quote), or stop (too much risk to proceed as-is).
Can I get a teardown for my own product?
Yes. Submit your product link, quantity, destination, SKU or options, carton data, and prep needs, and Supplymo turns the clue into a written pre-payment decision.
Do teardowns guarantee a supplier or customs outcome?
No. They help structure a decision before payment, but they do not guarantee supplier quality, customs clearance, carrier acceptance, platform approval, or final cost.
Boundary
Read these as a method, not as customer proof
These are anonymous educational teardown templates. They are not customer case studies, supplier endorsements, inspection certificates, customs advice, or promises that a future product will receive the same result.
